Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Here’s an Idea: Grow Food on Memphis’ Vacant Lots

Here’s an idea that could take root in Memphis. So to speak.

A nonprofit group in Detroit — Memphis’ unofficial sister city — is farming derelict land to grow food for the needy.

NPR’s “Morning Edition” says Urban Farming has a 20-plot pilot program in which volunteers tend the gardens and the city of Detroit picks up the water bill. The plots aren’t fenced off, so anyone can pick the produce for free and anything leftover is donated to a food bank.

If that weren’t enough, the program fights blight in a city that last year, with more than 7,000 idle properties, topped the nation in foreclosures …

Read about urban farming, virtual scavenger hunts, and more interesting stuff in Mary Cashiola’s In the Bluff blog.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Bank Shots

At some point during Monday’s regular public meeting of the Shelby County Commission, one of several petitioners for this or that largesse suggested that what the commission could do for the greater community would be to serve as a bridge over the existing gap between haves and have-nots.

That set off Commissioner Wyatt Bunker, who several weeks back warned of creeping “Marxism” and this time saw yet another leveling mechanism at work. “That’s not what we do,” he said.

Whether Bunker liked it or not, that’s what the commission did on Monday. Indeed, the body functioned like nothing so much as the board of directors of a taxpayer-funded bank, ruling thumbs up here (as in funding the bond issue for a University of Memphis-area commercial development) and thumbs down there (in declining to reconsider a black-owned firm’s proposal for a school-construction contract), while hedging its judgments on two other contested matters involving public money.

On those latter two matters: The commission forgave a $1 million loan to the Memphis Rock ‘N Soul Museum after forcing its director to make concessions on limited free admissions for students and Shelby Countians at large; it also tentatively released the first component of a community development grant in the LeMoyne-Owen College area, hinging the deal on what looked to be a pro forma follow-up by the office of county mayor A C Wharton.

(The commission’s decision to defer to Wharton to ensure that the LeMoyne-Owen project’s finances turned out to be in order made an interesting contrast to the cityside situation, where an ambitious new council is unlikely to cede any additional authority to an already impressively powered Mayor Willie Herenton. (See this week’s Viewpoint)

Undeniably, political considerations crept into the essentially financial decisions made by the commission on Monday. As an example: Pressure for the Highland Street TIF (tax-increment financing) proposal from the University of Memphis and its boosters has been formidable indeed, and Commissioner Mike Ritz, who for weeks has been the major holdout on that particular TIF, pleaded in vain that, in the strict sense of the term, no “blight” (obligatory under the terms of the grant) really existed on the strip.

Later, when Jeffrey Higgs, executive director of the LeMoyne-Owen College Community Development Corporation, was making the case for his own project, he made a point of looking Ritz’s way and insisting that “real blight” was to be seen in his territory. A smiling Ritz pointed back, signaling his agreement.

Ultimately, the only holdout on the LeMoyne-Owen project was Bunker, who, apropos several of the commission’s judgments — past, present, and, presumably, future — lamented that the body seemed to have become a charitable institution: “We save colleges, we save museums, we save roller coasters … ”

In protest, Bunker attempted to halt deliberations on the LeMoyne-Owen project by invoking the dread Rule 33, whereby any member can ask for an automatic two-week deferral on an agenda item. For a variety of reasons having to do with federal deadlines, that would probably kill the project, responded county financial officer Jim Huntzicker. Presumably in order to keep peace with his commission mates (Deidre Malone had been heard to remark, concerning the future of Rule 33, “I’m going to get rid of that!”), Bunker ultimately relented.

A purely political judgment of sorts is finally what thwarted the hopes of the black-owned Salton-Fox Construction Company for restoration of its contracting role in a $50 million school-construction project. Henri Brooks, usual champion of African-American causes, withheld what would have been her decisive “yes” vote on grounds that to give it would be to provide cover for the company’s role as a mere “front” for a white-owned enterprise. “I’m going to call it out,” she said.

(Salton-Fox, apparently now exonerated of complicity, had first found itself in the crosshairs when it was identified as the donor of campaign contributions to public officials in connection with the case of former commissioner Bruce Thompson, now under federal indictment for extortion and scheduled to be tried in March.)

The commission’s last act on Monday was both political and financial. By an 8-3 vote (dissenters were Herenton allies Malone, Brooks, and Sidney Chism), the commission approved Commissioner Steve Mulroy‘s resolution insisting on January 31st as an absolute deadline for Bass Pro Shop to put up or shut up on its bid for The Pyramid. (See “In the Bluff,” p. 10.)

Categories
News The Fly-By

Pork Product?

One side says “pork barrel legislation”; the other says “community enhancement grant.” Calling the whole thing off, however, is no option.

Democratic state senator Jim Kyle commenced a whistle-stop tour of a dozen libraries and community centers in the 28th District last week to inform his constituents about the $20 million budget surplus the state will disperse through community enhancement grants.

The program puts the onus on organizations to apply for the funds, rather than on politicians to choose among favorites. “We’ve never done it like this before,” explains Kyle. “This is the middle ground for [politicians] who don’t want to choose.”

In May, Republican representative Brian Kelsey of Memphis waved an envelope full of bacon at the legislature in Nashville in protest of the bill and charged that the program looks like pork and smells like pork, regardless of the new guidelines.

“This is a fundamental difference between Democrats and Republicans,” says Kyle. “They think there’s something wrong with it. We think this is what we’re supposed to do.”

Other Republicans, though, view the program as a compromise. Mark Norris, Republican senator from Germantown, says, “We opposed other measures that weren’t, shall we say, arm’s length fund disbursements. This lets the [neutral] secretary of state review applications and decide.”

The money is left over from franchise and excise taxes, which are imposed quarterly on for-profit businesses statewide.

“The issue came down to this, or making specific budget appropriations,” Kyle says. “We thought that the better course of action was to create a pool of funds.”

Applications are available on the Web site of the Tennessee Secretary of State. The grant program is open to community organizations, nonprofits, and those who can find a sponsoring organization. As of August 3rd, a variety of Shelby County organizations had applied.

LaSimba Gray, pastor of the New Sardis Baptist Church, applied for $1 million for the currently nonexistent African-American Museum. The application’s stated purpose explains simply that the “funds will be used.”

Other local organizations make slightly more modest requests with more specific justifications. Families of Incarcerated Individuals, a nonprofit founded in 1989 to “deter incarceration through family support,” requested $4,000, with the stated purpose to “expand the program to serve more youth affected by incarceration.”

Applicants have a 4 p.m. August 15th deadline. The money must be spent by next June 30th, or it will revert back to the state.

Here in the land of barbecue and weekend cookouts, “pork” and “community enhancement” now intersect in more ways than one.